HEMODYNAMIC AND BIOCHEMICAL MONITORING DURING MAJOR LIVER RESECTION WITH USE OF HEPATIC VASCULAR EXCLUSION

  • 1 January 1984
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 95  (3) , 309-318
Abstract
Resections (24) under hepatic vascular exclusion (HVE) were performed in patients with massive liver tumors. The procedure of HVE was used to minimize blood loss and the chance of gas embolism; it included clamping of the portal triad and occlusion of the inferior vena cava [IVC] above and below the liver. In 12 of these patients the HVE was associated with clamping of the abdominal aorta above the celiac axis (Aoc). During the anhepatic phase, which lasted 24-65 min (mean 39 min), neither venous shunt nor refrigeration was used. When HVE was associated with AoC, the circulation to the lower part of the body was completely excluded so that the systemic circulation was reduced to a small upper compartment in which the mean arterial pressure increased by 33% while the cardiac index [CI] decreased by 40%. The diastolic pulmonary arterial pressure remained unchanged. When HVE was not associated with AoC, the body was divided into an upper vascular compartment with normal venous resistance and a lower compartment with increased resistance to the venous return and increased blood volume. The CI, which was distrubuted to these 2 compartments, decreased by 40 to 50% but the mean arterial pressure decreased by only 14%. The good hemodynamic tolerance to HVE without Aoc that was observed in these patients confirms the efficiency of collateral venous channels in the circumstances reported. AoC appears to be unnecessary in most patients if accurate fluid volume loading has been achieved before HVE. The study of acid-base balance demonstrates the ability of the human body to correct spontaneously the acidosis that follows the release of the clamps, provided a stable hemodynamic state is maintained. Only minor disorders of coagulation, without abnormal bleeding, were observed, and no prophylactic treatment was necessary. There were no deaths during operation, but a 25% postoperative mortality rate was observed mainly related to the underlying disease and the status of the remnant liver parenchyma. Despite its apparent sophistication, HVE is a simple and safe procedure for performing otherwise hazardous liver resections for tumors of large size or that are located close to the IVC and the suprahepatic veins. Its hemodynamic and metabolic consequences appear to be moderate.